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Felix Holt the Radical

Chapter 9 

Word Count: 2057    |    Released on: 18/11/2017

lly born to fear

rrow, ripe in

ards me; and

rembles.' - Ki

off his hat and smiling. She did not smile,

shes that I could further, since I have not had an

towards the R

holding it behind him; the air was so soft and agreeable that

d's disposition towards him, which he suspected to be very far from friendly. Jermyn was not naturally flinty-hearted: at five-and-twenty he had written verses, and had got himself wet through in order not to disappoint a dark-eyed woman whom he was proud to believe

ansome did not speak. 'If he gets into parliament, I have no doubt he w

y suppressed: - suppressed because she could not endure that the degradation she inwardly felt should ever become visible or audible in acts or words of her own - should ever be re

now his opinions pain you; but I trust you find

arriages, and recommending them to enjoy themselves, and then expecting them to be c

: it was long since he had heard her speak t

ant feeling about your ma

er own past folly and misery. It was a resolve which had become a habit, that she would never quarrel with this man - never tell him what she saw him to be. She had kept her woman's pr

Mrs Transome's. He was anything but stupid; yet he always blundered when he wanted to be delicate or magnanimous; he const

sider, you will see that you have nothing to complain of in me, unless you will complain of the inevitable course of man's life. I

him a ground for presuming that he should have impunity in any lax dealing into which circumstances had led him. She knew that she herself had endured all the more privation because of his dishonest selfishness. And now, Harold's long-deferred heirship, and his return with startlingly unexpected penetration, activity, and assertion of mastery, had placed them both in the full presence of a difficulty which had been prepared by the years of vague uncertainty as to issues. In this position, with a great dread hanging over her, which Jermyn knew, and ought to have felt that he had caused her, she was incli

and wondering. For more than twenty years M

thing to ask. Ma

t is

never quarrel

it is my wish not

s a thing not to be done. Bear anything

tated by the implication that Harold might be disposed to use him roughly. 'A man's

er hand from his arm,' is it possible y

put both his hands in his pockets, and shrugging h

d Mrs Transome: there was a possibility of fierce insolence in this man who was to pass with those nearest to her

re both silent, taking the nearest way into the sunshine again. There was a half-formed w

eturned, and in that case he will be in high good-humour. Everything will be more propitious than you are apt to think. You must persuade yo

ter sweet and sweet bitter. But what I may think or feel is of

Transome shivered as she stood alone: all around her, where there had once been brightne

f the highest respectability, with a family of tall daughters, an expensive establishment, and a large professional business, owed a great deal more to himself as the mainstay of all those solidities, than to feelings and ideas which were quite unsubstantial. There were many unfortunate coincidences which placed Mr Jermyn in an uncomfortable posit

sausage; he got hungry, and desired to taste it; he pared a morsel off, then another, and another, in successive moments of temptation, till at last the sausage was

ad to do many things in law and in daily life which, in the abstract, he would have condemned; and indeed he had never been tempted by them in the abstract

a difficulty, went straight to his work. The election must be won: that would put Harold in

dance, told stories at supper, and made humorous quotations from his early readings: if these were Latin, he apologised, and translated to the ladies; so that a deaf lady-visitor from

e families in Treby refused to visit Jermyn, no

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